Automotive F&I Provider AUL Sold to Protective Life Division

AUL, based in Napa, CA, has a history of offering high-mileage F&I products going back more than 30 years, says Scott Karchunas, president of Protective Life’s Asset Protection Division, which has acquired AUL.

Jim Henry, Contributor

May 10, 2022

3 Min Read
AUL graphic

A division of insurer Protective Life reports the completion of its acquisition of AUL, an automotive F&I provider that’s a pioneer in product offerings for high-mileage vehicles, especially extended-service contracts.

“It’s not so much that we didn’t have products like those; we do. The point is, AUL is really the innovator of high-mileage products in our industry,” says Scott Karchunas, president of Protective’s Asset Protection Division, which acquires AUL.

AUL, based in Napa, CA, has a history of offering high-mileage F&I products going back more than 30 years, Karchunas says in a phone interview. The closing took effect May 2.

The high-mileage segment starts at roughly 100,000 miles (161,000 km). Around the industry, though, without specifying the brand of service contract, Protective says customers can purchase service contracts for vehicles with as many as 150,000 (241,500 km), or even 175,000 (281,750 km), miles on the odometer.

Here’s an example: the online brochure for one AUL service contract offers coverage up to 150,000 miles, with no limit on time in service. Vehicles up to 10 model years old, with up to 100,000 miles on the odometer, are eligible, the brochure says.

Scott Karchunas - Final.jpeg

Scott Karchunas - Final

“Their business model was built at the beginning, when the company was founded, around high-mileage policies. They were set up, from the ground up, to deliver value to those policyholders and to the independent dealers who are selling those policies,” Karchunas (pictured, left) says.

In more recent years, AUL added coverage aimed at franchised new-car dealers, for new and nearly new vehicles and also for electric vehicles.

Protective’s historical development is the other way around. Its traditional target is franchised new-car dealers and their customers. At Protective, high-mileage products for used cars are a later addition, Karchunas says.

“Everything AUL is doing is coming over — management, leaders are coming over. Talent is a big thing,” a big motivation for the acquisition, Karchunas says. “This is definitely a ‘value’ acquisition, not a ‘cost’ acquisition.”

Tthe central concept of the acquisition is to add value to both sides, not save costs by eliminating redundancy, he says.

“It’s not just about making more money. Of course, we want to return money to shareholders, and make the reinvestments in the business we need be competitive,” Karchunas says. “By the same token, we want to make sure what we’re doing leads to better solutions for our dealer clients.”

In addition to F&I products for retail sale, like other F&I providers, Protective and AUL also offer “participation” products such as reinsurance. That is, dealers can contribute to the reserves that are set aside for future claims. In exchange for sharing some of the risk, dealers can enjoy greater returns.

Protective Life, based in Birmingham, AL, is a wholly owned U.S. subsidiary of Tokyo-based insurer Dai-ichi Life Holdings, which acquired Protective Life in 2015.

The Asset Protection Division’s growth strategy is based on both acquisitions and organic growth, Karchunas says. The AUL closing is the division’s ninth acquisition, he says, and the third in roughly the past five years.

The two most recent are Atlanta-based service-contract provider Revolos, which is the former Interstate National, in 2021; and USWC, the holding company for F&I products provider U.S. Warranty of Pompano Beach, FL. That acquisition was announced in 2016.

 

 

About the Author

Jim Henry

Contributor

Jim Henry is a freelance writer and editor, a veteran reporter on the auto retail beat, with decades of experience writing for Automotive News, WardsAuto, Forbes.com, and others. He's an alumnus of the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, where he was a Morehead-Cain Scholar. 

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